Free printable worksheets for Filipino kids

Month: February 2014

It’s been a year since I posted worksheets on the parts of the face. Below are the new versions of these worksheets. I replaced the illustration with illustrations of a girl’s face and a boy’s face. So there are two versions of these worksheets, one with a girl’s face and one with a boy’s face. Click on the link to the pdf file below.

The thumbnails of the pages are shown below. You may print and distribute these worksheets/lesson sheets to your children or students, but you may not do so for profit. All illustrations are by samutsamot_mom.

This worksheet asks the student to point to the part of the face that is mentioned by the teacher or parent.

This lesson sheet indicates the names of the different parts of the face.

This worksheet asks the student to label the parts of the face.

These are the answers to the worksheet above. The first answer key has unaccented words. In the second answer key, the answers are accented.

The four 15-item pdf worksheets below are about the Filipino articles (mga pantukoy) ang, ang mga, si, sina, ni, nina, kay, and kina. The student is asked to write the pantukoy that will complete the sentence. The answer key is provided on the second page of each pdf file.

You may print and distribute these worksheets to your students or children. Please do not copy and/or distribute these worksheets for profit.

These pdf worksheets are about recognizing shapes in Filipino (mga hugis). The thumbnails of the worksheets are shown below. Click on the link to open the worksheet. You may print and distribute them to your children or students, but please do not do so for profit. All illustrations are by samutsamot_mom.

The shapes included in these worksheets are circle (bilog), triangle (tatsulok), square (parisukat), rectangle (parihaba), and oval (obalo).

Please note that in a previous worksheet I used the word habilog to identify the oval. I consulted the UP Diksiyonaryong Filipino (2010 Edition) and found out that the word habilog (or biluhaba) is an adjective (pang-uri) used to describe objects that are oval-shaped. The words obalo and obalado may be used as a noun to refer to the shape or as an adjective to describe an object that is oval-shaped.